Abstract

Background

Klebsiella pneumoniae (K. pneumoniae) is an opportunistic pathogen associated with community-acquired infections and nosocomial infections. From 2010 to 2015, K. pneumoniae testing was included into the exiting diarrhea-syndrome surveillance with objective to estimate the prevalence of K. pneumoniae in diarrhea-syndrome patients, test antibiotics susceptibility and investigate molecular characteristics.

Methods

Stool specimens from diarrhea-syndrome outpatients were cultured and identified the pathogens by the Vitek2 Compact instrument. The isolated K. pneumoniae strains were tested for antibiotics susceptibility by minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) method, and subtyped by pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and multilocus sequence typing (MLST).

Results

22 K. pneumoniae strains were identified from 4340 stool specimens of outpatients who visited sentinel hospitals in Beijing during 2010–2015. All strains were sensitive to gentamicin, nalidixic acid, ciprofloxacin, ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, cefepime, imipenem. The highest resistance rate of K. pneumoniae strains was 100% to amoxicillin–clavulanate, followed by 72.7% to ampicillin. These 22 K. pneumoniae strains were characterized into 21 different PFGE types and 20 MLST types with less similarity.

Conclusions

The detection rate of K. pneumoniae in stool specimens from outpatients with diarrhea syndromes was about 0.5% in Beijing. Less similarity of the isolated strains indicated the unlikely long-term circulating of K. pneumoniae in the community. ST23 was the most common genotype. Drug resistance of the community-acquired K. pneumoniae was not a serious problem in comparing with hospital-acquired infections. High vigilance in the community-acquired K. pneumoniae strains and investigation of pathogens’ microbiological characteristics are valuable for signals detection for drug resistance in population and strains variation.

The surveillance on diarrhea-syndrome outpatients included any age people in Beijing, involving 245 sentinel hospitals from all 16 districts. Stool specimens were collected from diarrhea-syndrome outpatients in sentinel hospitals [4], and tested the common diarrhea induced pathogens including rotavirus, norovirus, diarrheagenic Escherichia coli, Salmonella, and Shigella spp. [5]. Because the increasingly nosocomial infections caused by K. pneumoniae might impose an increasing risk of infections in communities, from 2010 to 2015, K. pneumoniae testing was included into the exiting diarrhea-syndrome surveillance with objective to estimate the prevalence of K. pneumoniae in diarrhea-syndrome outpatients, test antibiotics susceptibility and investigate microbiological characteristics.

Pulse field gel electrophoresis

K. pneumoniae strains were subtyped by pulse field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) method using restriction endonucleases XbaI [7]. The restriction endonuclease XbaI (Fermentas) was used to digest the prepared genomic DNA and resultant DNA fragments were separated in a PFGE CHEF-DR III system (Bio-Rad Laboratories) in 0.5× Tris–borate–EDTA buffer at 120 V for 18.5 h, with pulse times ranging from 6 to 36 s. PFGE dendrogram was generated by BioNumerics version 7.1 (Applied Math, Belgium) with the unweighted pair-group method (UPGMA) and Dice coefficient. Isolates that exhibited a PFGE profile with more than 80% similarity were considered as closely related strains [8, 9].

Multilocus sequence typing

Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) was performed to subtype K. pneumoniae strains using seven housekeeping genes (gapA, infB, mdh, pgi, phoE, rpoB, and tonB) [10]. Seven gene fragments of the K. pneumoniae strains were amplified by PCR and sequenced. The allele sequences and sequence types (STs) were determined by the Institute Pasteur Klebsiella MLST database (http://bigsdb.web.pasteur.fr/klebsiella/klebsiella.html). BioNumerics version 7.1 software was used to create the minimum spanning tree. In the minimum spanning tree, the founder ST was defined as the greatest number of single-locus variants. Types were represented by circles and the size of a circle indicated the number of strains with this particular type.

Results

Identification of bacterial strains

In the 4340 stool specimens collected in the surveillance period from 2010 to 2015, 22 K. pneumoniae strains were identified: one strain in 2010, three strains in 2011 and 2012 respectively, five strains in 2013, nine strains in 2014, and one strain in 2015; 16 out of 22 positive K. pneumoniae were isolated from April to October, while six positives identified in low-incidence seasons 2010–2015.

Antibiotics susceptibility results

Antibiotics susceptibility is shown in Table 1. The result showed that 22 K. pneumoniae strains were all sensitive to gentamicin, nalidixic acid, ciprofloxacin, ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, cefepime, imipenem, followed by 95.5% to trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole, cefoxitin, and 63.6% to sulfisoxazole. The highest resistance rate of K. pneumoniae strains was 100% to amoxicillin–clavulanate, and followed by 72.7% to ampicillin. Moreover, all 22 K. pneumoniae strains were sensitive to ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, the MIC was less than 1 μg/mL, and no ESBL production strain was identified.

PFGE typing

22 isolates showed 21 different PFGE types. The dendrogram of the PFGE image showed that four K. pneumoniae strains isolated during 2011–2014 had over 80% similarity, which categorized into one PFGE cluster (cluster A), while other strains had less similarity (Fig. 1).

MLST typing

MLST was performed for all 22 isolates to investigate the genetic relationships. MLST analysis revealed 20 different sequence types (STs), including three ST23 strains and one ST65. In addition to identifying ST23 and ST65 which are prevail in Asia countries, ST2362, ST2363, ST2364, ST2365, ST2366, ST2367, ST2368, ST2369, and ST2370 were discerned for the first time. In the minimum spanning tree, there were two clone groups: one clone group contained ST23 and ST1660, and the other clone group contained ST17 and ST20 (Fig. 2).

Discussion

K. pneumoniae is one of the most common Gram-negative pathogen found in human’s nasopharynx and in the intestinal tract [1]. It existed with 60–70% the carrier rate in the hospital environment, and was notified as a common pathogen caused nosocomial infection [1]. However, the community-acquired K. pneumoniae infection was rare reported. This study, through inclusion of K. pneumoniae into the existing diarrhea-syndrome surveillance, was able to detect K. pneumoniae infection in community and its risk for possible persistent transmission in population in Beijing.

The detection rate of K. pneumoniae in stool specimens from outpatients with diarrhea syndromes was about 0.5% (22/4340), which further demonstrated the existence of the community-acquired K. pneumoniae infection [11]. The prevalence in this study was much lower than the previous detection rate of K. pneumoniae in stool samples ranges from 5 to 38% in hospital patients [11], which emphasized the importance of nosocomial infection control as well necessary vigilance for detecting community-acquired K. pneumoniae.

Less similarity of the strains typed by PFGE or MLST indicated the unlikely long-term transmission of K. pneumoniae in the community. This study identified ST23 as the most common genotype, which were reported in many previous hospital-acquired infection studies in Asia [12, 13]. Noticeable this study isolated one ST65 strain, a mucoid phenotype and harbored rmpA gene for aerobactin, which more likely caused community-acquired infection [14, 15] and indicated as one of the independent risk factors for bacteremia in patients with pneumonia [13]. Moreover, the microbiological character of newly detected ST2362, ST2363, ST2364, ST2365, ST2366, ST2367, ST2368, ST2369, and ST2370, these strains presented clinical character are not thoroughly explicit, which needs further studies.

No ESBL production strains existed from stool specimens of diarrhea-syndrome outpatients in recent years illustrated that the community-acquired K. pneumoniae was not a serious public health problem. All the strains were sensitive to some antibiotics (e.g., cephalosporins, quinolones, and fluoroquinolones) universally in use for clinical treatment. However, hospital-acquired K. pneumoniae infection with resistance to multiple antibiotics agents has been increasing [16]. The Klebsiella species strains (e.g., TEM-type and SHV-type ESBLs, CTX-M type ESBLs) caused several predominant nosocomial infections [17]. This study did not identify the drug resistance for K. pneumoniae strains, but the diarrhea-syndrome surveillance identified serious drug resistance for Shigella spp. [4]. Given the consideration of horizontal transfer of drug resistance related genes as one of the most important mechanisms for the dramatically quickly dissemination of multi drug resistance among bacteria [18], monitoring the drug resistance of the community-acquired K. pneumoniae strains can provide a significant signal of drug resistance in population.

Conclusions

The detection rate of K. pneumoniae in stool specimens from outpatients with diarrhea syndromes was about 0.5% in Beijing. Less similarity of the isolated strains indicated the unlikely long-term transmission of K. pneumoniae in the community. ST23 was the most common genotype. Drug resistance of the community-acquired K. pneumoniae was not a serious problem in comparing with hospital-acquired infections. High vigilance in the drug resistance of the community-acquired K. pneumoniae strains can provide a significant signal of drug resistance in population.

Authors’ contributions

BL participated in molecular genetic studies and drafted the manuscript; XZ and YH participated in sample collection and antimicrobial susceptibility testing; HZ carried out the data analysis; MQ and QW participated in the design of the study. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Acknowledgements

We thank the team of the curators of the Institute Pasteur MLST system (Paris, France) for importing novel alleles, profiles and/or isolates at http://bigsdb.web.pasteur.fr.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Availability of data and materials

The datasets used and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Consent for publication

This manuscript did not include any details, images, or videos relating to individual participants.

Ethics approval and consent to participate

The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Beijing Center for Disease Control and Prevention. All patients in the study signed informed consent forms.

Funding

This work was supported by the Project of Beijing High-Level Technical Personnel Training in Health (2013-3-099) and National Science and Technology Support Projects for the “Thirteenth Five-Year Plan” for Infectious Diseases of China (2017ZX10104002-003-002).

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State Key Laboratory for Infection Disease Prevention and Control, National Institute for Communicable Disease Prevention and Control, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing, 102206, China

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